Academy trained military engineers
By Steve Grove
For the Poughkeepsie Journal
U.S. Military Academy
West Point, N.Y. 10996
Phone: Call the Visitors Center
at (845) 938-2638; general information, (845) 446-4724.
Key sites: Visitors Center; Trophy
Point; Cadet Chapel; Eisenhower Hall Theatre;
Michie Stadium; West Point Museum.
Directions: The USMA is a 45-minute
to 1-hour drive from Poughkeepsie. Take Interstate 84 across
the Newburgh-Beacon Bridge and exit at Newburgh. Follow Route
9W south through the city. Either remain on 9W or take Route
218 south. Both routes offer impressive views of the Hudson
River and valley. Follow the signs to the USMA. The best way
to reach the Visitors Center is Route 9W south to Highland Falls.
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In 1802, Congress established a military academy at West Point. When
created, the academy was part of the Army Corps of Engineers. Not
surprisingly, providing engineering instruction became the primary
objective of the educational program.
Mathematics and science courses provided the background for the
study of engineering. The academic program that resulted ultimately
became known as the ‘‘Thayer System.’’
Named after Sylvanus Thayer, superintendent of the U.S. Military
Academy at West Point from 1817-1833, it consisted of an innovative
approach to studying those required subjects. Courses were taught
in small classes, with daily recitations, and cadets were required
to pass all courses to graduate.
Since no other institution in America offered engineering instruction
before the 1820s, the academy became the first, and soon, the preeminent
engineering school in the nation. Many graduates used their engineering
background to benefit the nation in the decades before the Civil
War. Graduates were responsible for construction of many of the
nation’s initial railroad lines, harbors, bridges and roads.
Although heavily based in technical fields, West Point’s
academic program was not limited to those areas. The instruction
and training were broad enough to enable graduates to make significant
contributions, in junior leadership positions, in the Mexican War
and in senior leadership positions in the Civil War. The contribution
of West Pointers was so profound during the Civil War that, for
decades thereafter, the institution began to rest on its laurels.
Rather than being attentive to educational and technological advances,
the academy lost its standing. Though there were some advances in
expanding physical fitness requirements for cadets, the curriculum
remained tied to its traditional offerings.
Following the end of World War I, Douglas MacArthur became superintendent
and tried to improve the institution in a variety of ways. He sought
to expand the academic program to include behavioral and social
sciences to better enable graduates to deal with complexities of
the modern world. He had little success during his tenure, but many
of his innovations were adopted by subsequent superintendents.
Indeed, the introduction of the study of human psychology to the
curriculum was made at the direction of Army Chief of Staff Dwight
Eisenhower after World War II.
In recent decades, the academic program has moved from a rather
narrowly prescribed curriculum to one offering opportunities for
individual choice, with the introduction of electives in the 1960s.
It then evolved into a balanced curriculum that includes a strong
program of study in the humanities, public affairs, math, science
and engineering.
Cadets in the Class of 1985 were the first given the opportunity
to select an academic major. This change enables cadets to concentrate
on those areas of individual strength and interest while still receiving
a substantial core curriculum. The introduction of personal computers
in 1986 has led to the full integration of the Corps of Cadets with
the Internet.
The academy’s modern course of study provides a solid foundation
that will enable graduates to address the multitude of demands of
the next century. In that way, the academic program helps cadets
continue to be leaders of character and serve the needs of our army
and nation.
Steve Grove is historian at the U.S. Military Academy at West
Point.
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